Political Reminiscences: Including a Sketch of the Origin and History of the "Statesman Party" of Boston, Partea 1author, 1835 - 172 pagini |
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Pagina 12
... fact that there has appeared a general and decided hostility to the pledged ticket , and we believe that at the polls a very great majority of the Federalists will act with us . us . About five or six hundred voters are now present ...
... fact that there has appeared a general and decided hostility to the pledged ticket , and we believe that at the polls a very great majority of the Federalists will act with us . us . About five or six hundred voters are now present ...
Pagina 36
... fact persuade the great and leading men of the Jackson party in other States that they alone were deserving of honors , and that all , who were not their servants , were federalists and traitors . The rancour manifested in the Boston ...
... fact persuade the great and leading men of the Jackson party in other States that they alone were deserving of honors , and that all , who were not their servants , were federalists and traitors . The rancour manifested in the Boston ...
Pagina 40
... fact was , his signature , to a call for an Adams meeting in Boston . Mr. Simpson kindly favoured me with a partial view of this precious document , —but , at a distance of ten feet , with part of the name covered with his finger . He ...
... fact was , his signature , to a call for an Adams meeting in Boston . Mr. Simpson kindly favoured me with a partial view of this precious document , —but , at a distance of ten feet , with part of the name covered with his finger . He ...
Pagina 42
... fact of his nomination by one of the great parties of the country , will convince all who have no personal acquaintance with the candidate , that such as- saults are but the malignant slanders of bitter political warfare ; —and as all ...
... fact of his nomination by one of the great parties of the country , will convince all who have no personal acquaintance with the candidate , that such as- saults are but the malignant slanders of bitter political warfare ; —and as all ...
Pagina 43
... he did owe them , ) to pay off his debts . It did more . In case Greene owed them nothing , * This was the sum named at Washington ; we shall see how it swelled afterwards . • 7 ( which I am suspicious was the fact , ) 43.
... he did owe them , ) to pay off his debts . It did more . In case Greene owed them nothing , * This was the sum named at Washington ; we shall see how it swelled afterwards . • 7 ( which I am suspicious was the fact , ) 43.
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Political Reminiscences: Including a Sketch of the Origin and ..., Partea 1 John Barton Derby Vizualizare completă - 1835 |
Political Reminiscences: Including a Sketch of the Origin and ..., Partea 1 John Barton Derby Vizualizare completă - 1835 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Adams Administration affidavit afterwards Amos Kendall annum appointment believe Boston Statesman Brodhead Bulletin party Buren Cabal candidate cause character Chief Clerk confidence contempt County Committee Court Crawford party Custom House David Henshaw debt declared Dedham democracy democratic dinner dollars Duff Green Dunlap duties editor enemy exclaimed faction Faneuil Hall favour federal federalists Francis Baylies friends of Jackson gentleman Government head honor hopes influence intelligence invitation Isaac Hill Jackson party Jacksonian Jacksonman justice labours liberty Massachusetts McNeil meeting ment mercenary Nathaniel Greene Navy Agent never New-England nomination numerous office-seekers officers in Boston paper partisans party in Boston patriotism political friends Post Office Postmaster of Boston present President principles public officers received respectable scorn Secretary Senate sentiments Simpson spirit Statesman leaders Statesman office Statesman party suffered supposed Surveyor talents thought ticket tion tom House votes Washington Washington Garden zeal
Pasaje populare
Pagina 75 - I, that am curtail'd of this fair proportion, Cheated of feature by dissembling nature, Deform'd, unfinish'd, sent before my time Into this breathing world, scarce half made up, And that so lamely and unfashionable, That dogs bark at me as I halt by them...
Pagina 44 - There is, betwixt that smile we would aspire to, That sweet aspect of princes, and their ruin, More pangs and fears than wars or women have ; And when he falls, he falls like Lucifer, Never to hope again.
Pagina 43 - ... with the enaction of laws, a spirit of rash innovation and daring empiricism, a disdain of the established usages of mankind, a foolish desire to dazzle the world with new and untried systems of policy, in which the precedents of antiquity and the experience of ages are only consulted to be trodden under foot ; and into the executive department of government, a fierce contention for pre-eminence, an incessant struggle to supplant and destroy, with a propensity to calumny and suspicion, proscription...
Pagina 84 - In the corrupted currents of this world Offence's gilded hand may shove by justice, And oft 'tis seen the wicked prize itself Buys out the law...
Pagina 43 - ... in the functions of government. The short-lived forms of power and office glided with such rapidity through successive ranks of degradation, from the court to the very dregs of the populace, that they seemed rather to solicit acceptance than to be a prize contended for.* Yet, as it was still impossible for all to possess authority, though none were willing to obey, a general impatience to break the ranks and rush into the foremost ground maddened and infuriated the nation, and overwhelmed law,...
Pagina 43 - ... difficult, without adverting to the national character of the people, to account for its extraordinary predominance. Political power, the most seducing object of ambition, never before circulated through so many hands ; the prospect of possessing it was never before presented to so many minds. Multitudes who, by their birth and education, and not unfrequently by their talents, seemed destined to perpetual obscurity, were, by the alternate rise and fall of parties, elevated into distinction, and...
Pagina 43 - ... lessons on the nature and progress of the passions. The true light in which the French revolution ought to be contemplated is that of a grand experiment on human nature. Among the various passions which that revolution has so strikingly displayed, none is more conspicuous than vanity ; nor is it less difficult, without adverting to the national character of the people, to account for its extraordinary predominance. Political power, the most seducing object of ambition, never before circulated...
Pagina 27 - Dreading all respectable competitors in the expected distribution of offices, they sought recruits only in the kennels and gutters. Proclaiming Jackson an Irishman, they planted their flag in the menage of Broad-street; and holding him up as the champion of the poor against the rich, they received, with " hugs fraternal," the tenants of poor-houses and penitentiaries.
Pagina 31 - Fe, Fi, Fo, Fum! I smell the blood of an Englishman. Be he live or be he dead, I'll grind his bones to make me bread.
Pagina 66 - The tears that flow on this fond recital will never dry up. My heart, penetrated with the remembrance of the man, grows liquid as I write, and I could pour it out like water. I could weep too for my country, which, mournful as it is, does not know the half of its loss. It deeply laments, when it turns its eyes back, and sees what Hamilton was ; but my soul stiffens with despair when I think what Hamilton would have been.